THE PRISONERS RELEASED
The first dread days, when the Boy,
heavy with fever, seemed scarcely to realise our presence,
were swiftly followed by placid hours when he lay
and smiled in blissful content, craving nothing, now
that we were all together again. But this state
of beatitude was quickly ousted by a period of discontent,
when the hunger fiend reigned supreme in the little
room.
“Manger, manger, manger,
tout lé temps!" Thus the nurse epitomised the
converse of her charges. And indeed she was right,
for, from morning till night, the prisoners’
solitary topic of conversation was food. During
the first ten days their diet consisted solely of boiled
milk, and as that time wore to a close the number
of quarts consumed increased daily, until Paul, the
chief porter, seemed ever ascending the little outside
stair carrying full bottles of milk, or descending
laden with empty ones.
“Milk doesn’t count.
When shall we be allowed food, real food?”
was the constant cry, and their relief was abounding
when, on Christmas Day, the doctor withdrew his prohibition,
and permitted an approach to the desired solids.
But even then the prisoners, to their loudly voiced
disappointment, discovered that their only choice lay
between vermicelli and tapioca, nursery dishes which
at home they would have despised.
“Tapioca! Imagine tapioca
for a Christmas dinner!” the invalids exclaimed
with disgust. But that scorn did not prevent them
devouring the mess and eagerly demanding more.
And thereafter the saucepan simmering over the gas-jet
in the outer room seemed ever full of savoury spoon-meat.
I doubt if any zealous mother-bird
ever had a busier time feeding her fledglings than
had the good Sister in satisfying the appetites of
these callow cormorants. To witness the French
nun seeking to allay the hunger of these voracious
schoolboy aliens was to picture a wren trying to fill
the ever-gaping beaks of two young cuckoos whom an
adverse fate had dropped into her nest.
As the days wore by, the embargo placed
upon our desire to cater for the invalids was gradually
lifted, and little things such as sponge biscuits
and pears crept in to vary the monotony of the milk
diet.
New Year’s Day held a tangible
excitement, for that morning saw a modified return
to ordinary food, and, in place of bottles of milk,
Paul’s load consisted of such tempting selections
from the school meals as were deemed desirable for
the invalids. Poultry not being included in the
school menus, we raided a cooked-provision shop and
carried off a plump, well-browned chicken. The
approbation which met this venture resulted in our
supplying a succession of poulettes, which,
at the invalids’ express desire, were smuggled
into their room under my cloak. Not that there
was the most remote necessity for concealment, but
the invalids, whose sole interest centred in food,
laboured under the absurd idea that, did the authorities
know they were being supplied from without, their
regular meals would be curtailed to prevent them over-eating.
The point of interest, for the Red-Cross
prisoners at least, in our morning visits lay in the
unveiling of the eatables we had brought. School
food, however well arranged, is necessarily stereotyped,
and the element of the unknown ever lurked in our
packages. The sugar-sticks, chocolates, fruit,
little cakes, or what we had chanced to bring, were
carefully examined, criticised, and promptly devoured.
A slight refreshment was served them
during our short stay, and when we departed we left
them eagerly anticipating luncheon. At gloaming,
when we returned, it was to find them busy with half-yards
of the long crusty loaves, plates of jelly, and tumblers,
filled with milk on our Boy’s part, and with
well diluted wine on that of his fellow sufferer.
Fear of starvation being momentarily
averted, the Soeur used to light fresh candles
around the tiny Holy Bebe on the still green
Christmas-tree, and for a space we sat quietly enjoying
the radiance. But by the time the last candle
had flickered out, and the glow of a commonplace paraffin
lamp lighted the gloom, nature again demanded nourishment;
and we bade the prisoners farewell for the night, happy
in the knowledge that supper, sleep, and breakfast
would pleasantly while away the hours till our return.
The elder Red-Cross knight was a tall,
good-looking lad of sixteen, the age when a boy wears
painfully high collars, shaves surreptitiously and
unnecessarily with his pen-knife, talks
to his juniors about the tobacco he smokes in a week,
and cherishes an undying passion for a maiden older
than himself. He was ever an interesting study,
though I do not think I really loved him until he
confided his affairs of the heart, and entrusted me
with the writing of his love-letters. I know that
behind my back he invariably referred to me as “Ma”;
but as he openly addressed the unconscious nun as
“you giddy old girl,” “Ma”
might almost be termed respectful, and I think our
regard was mutual.
All things come to him who waits.
There came a night when for the last time we sat together
around the little tree, watching the Soeur light
the candles that illuminated the Holy Bebe.
On the morrow the prisoners, carefully disinfected,
and bearing the order of their release in the form
of a medical certificate, would be set free.
It clouded our gladness to know that
before the patient Sister stretched another period
of isolation. Just that day another pupil had
developed scarlet fever, and only awaited our boys’
departure to occupy the little room. Hearing
that this fresh prisoner lay under sentence of durance
vile, we suggested that all the toys chiefly
remnants of shattered armies that, on hearing of the
Boy’s illness, we had brought from the home
playroom he had outgrown might be left for
him instead of being sent away to be burnt.
The Boy’s bright face dulled.
“If it had been anybody else! But, mother,
I don’t think you know that he is the one French
boy we disliked. It was he who always shouted
‘a bas les Anglais!’ in the playground.”
The reflection that for weary weeks
this obnoxious boy would be the only inmate of the
boite, as the invalids delighted to call their
sick-room, overcame his antipathetic feeling, and he
softened so far as to indite a polite little French
note offering his late enemy his sympathy, and formally
bequeathing to him the reversion of his toys, including
the arbre de Noel with all its decorations,
except the little waxen Jesus nestling in the manger
of yellow corn; the Soeur had already declared
her intention of preserving that among her treasures.
The time that had opened so gloomily
had passed, and now that it was over we could look
back upon many happy hours spent within the dingy
prison walls. And our thoughts were in unison,
for the Boy, abruptly breaking the silence, said:
“And after all, it hasn’t been such a bad
time. Do you know, I really think I’ve rather
enjoyed it!”